This action triggers another GitHub Actions workflow, using the workflow_dispatch
event.
The workflow must be configured for this event type e.g. on: [workflow_dispatch]
This allows you to chain workflows, the classic use case is have a CI build workflow, trigger a CD release/deploy workflow when it completes. Allowing you to maintain separate workflows for CI and CD, and pass data between them as required.
For details of the workflow_dispatch
even see this blog post introducing this type of trigger
Note 1. GitHub now has a native way to chain workflows called "reusable workflows". See the docs on reusing workflows. This approach is somewhat different from workflow_dispatch but it's worth keeping in mind.
Note 2. The GitHub UI will report flows triggered by this action as "manually triggered" even though they have been run programmatically via another workflow and the API.
Note 3. If you want to reference the target workflow by ID, you will need to list them with the following REST API call curl https://api.github.com/repos/{{owner}}/{{repo}}/actions/workflows -H "Authorization: token {{pat-token}}"
Required. The name, filename or ID of the workflow to be triggered and run. All three possibilities are used when looking for the workflow. e.g.
workflow: My Workflow
# or
workflow: my-workflow.yaml
# or
workflow: 1218419
Optional. The inputs to pass to the workflow (if any are configured), this must be a JSON encoded string, e.g. { "myInput": "foobar" }
Optional. The Git reference used with the triggered workflow run. The reference can be a branch, tag, or a commit SHA. If omitted the context ref of the triggering workflow is used. If you want to trigger on pull requests and run the target workflow in the context of the pull request branch, set the ref to ${{ github.event.pull_request.head.ref }}
.
Optional. The default behavior is to trigger workflows in the same repo as the triggering workflow, if you wish to trigger in another GitHub repo "externally", then provide the owner + repo name with slash between them e.g. microsoft/vscode
.
- When triggering across repos like this, you must provide a
token
(see below), or you will get an "Resource not accessible by integration" error. - If the default branch in the other repo is different from the calling repo, you must provide
ref
input also, or you will get a "No ref found" error.
Optional. By default the standard github.token
/GITHUB_TOKEN
will be used and you no longer need to provide your own token here.
repo
option to call across repos, you must provide the token. In order to do so, create a PAT token with repo rights, and pass it here via a secret, e.g. ${{ secrets.MY_TOKEN }}
.
This option is also left for backwards compatibility with older versions where this field was mandatory.
This Action emits a single output named workflowId
.
- name: Invoke workflow without inputs
uses: step-security/workflow-dispatch@v1
with:
workflow: My Workflow
- name: Invoke workflow with inputs
uses: step-security/workflow-dispatch@v1
with:
workflow: Another Workflow
inputs: '{ "message": "blah blah", "something": true }'
- name: Invoke workflow in another repo with inputs
uses: step-security/workflow-dispatch@v1
with:
workflow: my-workflow.yaml
repo: step-security/example
inputs: '{ "message": "blah blah", "something": false }'
# Required when using the `repo` option. Either a PAT or a token generated from the GitHub app or CLI
token: "${{ secrets.MY_TOKEN }}"